The United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken commended Ethiopia over its progress in implementing a peace deal to end the Tigray conflict.
Secretary Blinkens is on a visit to Ethiopia to repair relations that were strained by the two-year war in the northern region as he pushes to usher the country back into a U.S. trade programme.
Blinkens met with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and discussed ongoing efforts to solidify peace, restore basic services, and address humanitarian needs.
He remarked that Ethiopia had been given clear benchmarks and Washington would continue to work with the government in Addis to achieve the goal.
The Ethiopian government and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) in the northern region agreed to a permanent truce to cease hostilities following the conclusion of a peace deal brokered by the African Union in South Africa.
“Certainly we share the aspiration of Ethiopia returning to AGOA,” Blinken told reporters after his meetings with Abiy and other government figures, adding that “it’s moving in the right direction” as Ethiopia continues to implement the peace accord.
“We have agreed to strengthen the long-standing bilateral relations between our countries with a commitment to partnership,” Abiy said on Twitter after the meeting.
At the peak of the crisis, the U.S. government restricted economic and security assistance to Ethiopia and cut access to the U.S. African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), a duty-free trade programme that had been a boon for the country’s textile sector.
The Tigray Region is the northernmost regional state of Ethiopia. The Region is the homeland of the Tigrayan, Irob, and Kunama people.